Zaman Shadia, Lippman Soyeon Im, Zhao Xin, Broach James R
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA.
Annu Rev Genet. 2008;42:27-81. doi: 10.1146/annurev.genet.41.110306.130206.
Yeast cells sense the amount and quality of external nutrients through multiple interconnected signaling networks, which allow them to adjust their metabolism, transcriptional profile and developmental program to adapt readily and appropriately to changing nutritional states. We present our current understanding of the nutritional sensing networks yeast cells rely on for perceiving the nutritional landscape, with particular emphasis on those sensitive to carbon and nitrogen sources. We describe the means by which these networks inform the cell's decision among the different developmental programs available to them-growth, quiescence, filamentous development, or meiosis/sporulation. We conclude that the highly interconnected signaling networks provide the cell with a highly nuanced view of the environment and that the cell can interpret that information through a sophisticated calculus to achieve optimum responses to any nutritional condition.
酵母细胞通过多个相互关联的信号网络感知外部营养物质的数量和质量,这些网络使它们能够调整新陈代谢、转录谱和发育程序,以便随时且适当地适应不断变化的营养状态。我们阐述了目前对酵母细胞赖以感知营养状况的营养感知网络的理解,特别强调了那些对碳源和氮源敏感的网络。我们描述了这些网络促使细胞在其可用的不同发育程序——生长、静止、丝状发育或减数分裂/孢子形成之间做出决定的方式。我们得出结论,高度互联的信号网络为细胞提供了对环境的高度细致入微的看法,并且细胞可以通过复杂的计算来解读该信息,以实现对任何营养状况的最佳反应。